Top Banner
Generational Theft May 7, 2013 Geoffrey Canada Stan Druckenmiller 1
20

Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

Nov 11, 2014

Download

Documents

bowdoinorient

Talk by Stanley Druckenmiller and Geoffrey Canada delivered at Bowdoin College on May 7, 2013.
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

1

Generational TheftMay 7, 2013

Geoffrey CanadaStan Druckenmiller

Page 2: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

2

“We are a nation of takers” – Nicholas Eberstadt

Page 3: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

3

The level of generosity to the elderly has almost doubled in the last 40 years, unsustainable

Source: CBO and social security data.

Benefit per oldster / GDP per capita

Page 4: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

4

The young’s consumption is up by 38% in 30 years, while the old’s consumption is up by 164%!

Source: Gokhale, Kotlikoff, Sabelhaus, 1996.

Average consumption by age group

Young

Old

Young

Old

Page 5: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

5

Poverty rate for the elderly have collapsed, not so for children

National Health Spending across Countries

Page 6: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

6

Fertility rates have gone down dramatically

Fertility rate = 3.7% in 1950s ; Fertility rate = 2.06 in 2011

Source: National Center for Health Statistics

2013Baby boom +65 years

Page 7: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

7

Life expectancy has gone up sharply

US life expectancy by gender, 1900 – 2006

Page 8: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

8

The entitlement’s problem is just beginning

Source: CBO, 2012.

Federal spending by entitlement’s program

Page 9: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

9

Dependency ratio is just starting to fall• By 2030, there will be HALF the amount of young to support the old

Page 10: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

10

What is the fastest growing age population?

Page 11: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

11

The true “fiscal gap”If taxes rates and the level of generosity in entitlements

programs remain the same, we have a massive problem ahead. Either tax rates rise or generosity falls. There is no alternative.

Source: Kotlikoff, 2012

Page 12: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

12

The cost of waiting is enormous

Source: Kotlikoff, 2012

The increase in all federal taxes and expenditures needed to cover fiscal gap today is much lower than in 40 years

Page 13: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

13

Raising taxes on the rich is not the solution

Page 14: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

14

Lower capital gains and dividends is a direct transfer from young to old

New worth by age of household head in 2007

Source: Survey of Consumer Finance

Page 15: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

15

2011 U.S. defense spending exceeded the 13 next highest defense budgets combined

Source: Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, SIPRI Military Expenditure Database.Note: Dollar figures are in billions of 2011 constant U.S. dollars.

Page 16: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

16

The biased growth of the welfare state

US consumption by age (ratio to labor income ages 30-49)

Source: US national Transfer Accounts, Lee, Donehower and Miller, 2011.

Page 17: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

17

Despite spending twice the average country, health outcomes are bad

National Health Spending across Countries

Page 18: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

18

Generational TheftMay 7, 2013

Geoffrey CanadaStan Druckenmiller

Page 19: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

19

An additional problem of inefficiency

Source: CBO, 2012.

National Health Spending across Countries

Page 20: Druckenmiller and Canada: Generational Theft

20

Aging has come with more consumption and less investment